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Here it shows you how and where each named description under the word is show
But the branch verse (John 15:2)
isnt being referred to as it points to which verses are gathered these things from but is under 3 b
1. to raise up;
a.
to raise from the ground, take up:
stones, John 8:59;
serpents, Mark 16:18;
a dead body, Acts 20:9.
b.
to raise upward, elevate, lift up: the hand, Revelation 10:5;
the eyes, John 11:41;
the voice, i. e., speak in a loud tone, cry out,
Luke 17:13;
Acts 4:24 (also in secular writings); τήν ψυχήν, to raise the mind, equivalent
to excite, affect strongly (with a sense of fear, hope, joy, grief, etc.); in
John 10:24 to hold the mind in suspense between doubt and hope, cf. Lucke (or Meyer) at the passage,
c. to draw up: a fish, Matthew 17:27 (ἀνασπᾶν,
Habakkuk 1:15); σκάφην,
Acts 27:17;
anchors from the bottom of the sea, Acts 27:13, where supply τάς ἀγκύρας; cf. Kuinoel at the passage; (Winers Grammar, 594 (552); Buttmann, 146 (127)).
2. to take upon oneself and carry what has been raised, to bear: τινα ἐπί χειρῶν,
Matthew 4:6;
Luke 4:11 (
Psalm 90:12 ());
a sick man, Mark 2:3; ζυγόν,
Matthew 11:29(
Lamentations 3:27);
a bed, Matthew 9:6;
Mark 2:9, 11;
Luke 5:24;
John 5:8-12; τόν σταυρόν, Matt. ( Lachmann marginal reading); ;
Luke 9:28;
Mark 8:34;
Mark 10:21 (in R Lbrackets);
Mark 15:21; (λίθον)
Revelation 18:21;
to carry with one, (A. V. take):
Mark 6:8;
Luke 9:3;
Luke 22:36. Both of these ideas are expressed in classical Greek by the middle αἴρεσθαι.
3. to bear away what has been raised, carry off;
a. to move from its place: Matthew 21:21;
Mark 11:23 (ἄρθητι
be thou taken up, removed (Buttmann, 52 (45)),
namely, from thy place);
Matthew 22:13 (Rec.);
John 2:16;
John 11:39, 41;
John 20:1.
b. to take off or away what is attached to anything:John 19:31, 38f;
to tear away, Matthew 9:16;
Mark 2:21;
to rend away, cut off, John 15:2.
c.
to remove: 1 Corinthians 5:2 (
cast out from the church, where ἀρθῇ should be read for Rec. ἐξαρθῇ); tropically:
faults, Ephesians 4:31; τήν ἁμαρτίαν,
John 1:29 (36 Lachmann in brackets),
to remove the guilt and punishment of sin by expiation, or to cause that sin be neither imputed nor punished (αἴρειν ἁμάρτημα,
1 Samuel 15:25;ἀνόμημα,
1 Samuel 25:28, i. e.
to grant pardon for an offence); but in
1 John 3:5 τάς ἁμαρτίας ἡμῶν αἴρεινis
to cause our sins to cease, i. e.
, that we no longer sin, while we enter into fellowship with Christ, who is free from sin, and abide in that fellowship, cf.
1 John 3:6.
d. to carry off; carry away with one: Matthew 14:12, 20;
Matthew 15:37;
Matthew 20:14;
Matthew 24:17;
Mark 6:29, 43;
Mark 8:8, 19;
Mark 13:15;
Luke 9:17;
Luke 17:31;
John 20:2, 13, 15;
Acts 20:9.
e.
to appropriate what is taken: Luke 19:21;
Mark 15:24.
f.
to take away from another what is his or what is committed to him, to take by force:
Luke 6:30;
Luke 11:52; τίἀπό with
the genitive of person,
Matthew 13:12;
Matthew 21:43;
Matthew 25:28;
Luke 8:12, 18;
Luke 19:24, 26; (
Matthew 25:29); Mark 4
John 10:18;
John 16:22;
perhaps also with the mere genitive of the person from whom anything is taken, Luke 6:29;
Luke 11:22;
John 11:48,
unless one prefer to regard these as possessive genitive,
g.
to take and apply to any use:
Acts 21:11;
1 Corinthians 6:15.
h.
to take from among the living, either by a natural death,
John 17:15 (ἐκ τοῦ κόσμου
take away from contact with the world), or by violence,
Matthew 24:39;
Luke 23:18;
John 19:15;
Acts 21:36;
with the addition of ἀπό τῆς γῆς,
Acts 22:22; αἴρεται ἀπό τῆς γῆς ἡ ζῶν αὐτοῦ,
of a bloody death inflicted upon one, Acts 8:33 (
Isaiah 53:8).
i. of things; to take out of the way, destroy: χειρόγραφον,
Colossians 2:14;
cause to cease: τήνκρίσιν,
Acts 8:33 (
Isaiah 53:8). (Compare: ἀπαίρω,ἐξαίρω, ἐπαίρω, μεταίρω, συναίρω, ὑπεραίρω.)
From here
Strong's Greek: 142. αἴρω (airó) -- to raise, take up, lift[/TD]
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